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  1. La princesa Désirée, entre sus hermanas, Margarita y Brígida (1958). Nació el 2 de junio de 1938 en el Palacio de Haga, en Solna, a las afueras de Estocolmo, siendo la tercera hija del príncipe Gustavo Adolfo de Suecia y de su esposa, la princesa Sibila de Sajonia-Coburgo-Gotha. Fue madrina de bautismo de su sobrina, la princesa heredera ...

  2. Désirée = Desiree, Annemarie Selinko Eugénie Bernardine Désirée Clary (8 November 1777 – 17 December 1860), in Swedish officially Eugenia Bernhardina Desideria, was Queen of Sweden and Norway as the consort of King Charles XIV John (a former French General and founder of the House of Bernadotte), mother of Oscar I, and one-time fiancée of Napoleon Bonaparte.

  3. Désirée's engagement to Baron Nils-August Otto Carl Niclas Silfverschiöld, (1934-2017) was announced on 18 December 1963, and the couple married on 5 June 1964 in Storkyrkan in Stockholm. As a result of her non-royal marriage, she lost her style of Royal Highness and her position as a princess of Sweden, [2] but was given the courtesy Princess Désirée, Baroness Silfverschiöld by the King.

  4. In 1798, Désirée married the French soldier Jean Bernadotte who would rise from the ranks to become one of Napoleon's marshals and later be placed on the throne of Sweden by Napoleon and crowned Charles XIV John. Charles XIV and Désirée began the Bernadotte line that continued through the 20th century.

  5. 1 de oct. de 2010 · T o be young, in France, and in love: fourteen year old Desiree can't believe her good fortune. Her fiance, a dashing and ambitious Napoleon Bonaparte, is poised for battlefield success, and no longer will she be just a French merchant's daughter. She could not have known the twisting path her role in history would take, nearly breaking her ...

  6. www.kungahuset.se › english › royal-houseDesideria | Kungahuset

    Desideria (Désirée Clary), 1777–1860. Désirée was born on 8 November 1777 in Marseilles, the youngest of nine children. Her parents were François Clary and Françoise Rose Soumis. After the revolution, she got to know Jean Baptiste Bernadotte. They were married in 1798, and their son Oskar (I) was born the following year.

  7. Although Bernadotte was elected crown prince of Sweden in 1810, Désirée – who assumed the title of Comtesse du Gotland – did not immediately join him. Unaccustomed to the cold climate and reluctant to join her husband at the court in Stockholm, which she considered austere and dull, she remained in Paris, where she became known as “Bernadotte’s little spy”.